His Dark Materials (play)
His Dark Materials | |
---|---|
Written by | Philip Pullman (novel) Nicholas Wright (play) |
Date premiered | 20 December 2003 |
Place premiered | Olivier Theatre London |
Original language | English |
Subject | Life and death, power and authority |
Official site |
His Dark Materials is a play written by British playwright Nicholas Wright, adapted from the Philip Pullman fantasy novel trilogy of the same title. The production premiered in the Royal National Theatre's Olivier Theatre, London, in 2003. Due to the complications in staging a piece containing the narrative of three books, the play was performed in two parts in alternate performances. The play is published by Nick Hern Books.
Synopsis[]
The play follows the same plot as the books – a story of the coming of age of two children, Will Parry and Lyra Belacqua, and their adventures as they wander through a series of parallel universes against a backdrop of epic events. During their quest, the pair encounter various fantasy creatures such as witches and armoured polar bears in a journey which they hope will take them to The Republic of Heaven.
There are however some substantial differences, most notably the removal of the character Dr. Mary Malone, whose role in the story is turned over to the witch Serafina Pekala. Similarly the eponymous amber spyglass of the third novel, associated with Malone, is also largely absent.
Productions[]
Original production[]
The original production was staged at the Olivier Theatre, National Theatre and ran from 20 December 2003 until 27 March 2004.[1] The production was directed by Nicholas Hytner and featured the following cast:
- Pantalaimon – Samuel Barnett
- Lord Boreal – John Carlisle
- Will Parry – Dominic Cooper
- Serafina Pekkala – Niamh Cusack
- Lord Asriel – Timothy Dalton
- Farder Coram – Patrick Godfrey
- John Faa – Stephen Greif
- Billy Costa – Jamie Harding
- Mrs Coulter – Patricia Hodge
- –
- Jopari/Iofur Raknison – Chris Larkin
- Tortured Witch/Harpy –
- Salcilia –
- Fra Pavel/Lee Scoresby – Tim McMullan
- – Iain Mitchell
- Lyra Belacqua – Anna Maxwell Martin
- –
- Stelmaria –
- Ruta Skadi –
- –
- Thorold – Nick Sampson
- Iorek Byrnison – Dany Sapani
- Ben –
- Roger Parslow – Russell Tovey
- Perkins –
- Astronomy Scholar/ –
- – Ben Whishaw
- Angelica –
- Golden Monkey – Ben Wright
- Tony Costa –
All other parts were played by members of the company.
The technical crew were as follows:
- Set Designer – Giles Cadle
- Costume Designer –
- Puppet Designer – Michael Curry
- Lighting Designer – Paule Constable
- Video Projection Designer – for
- Computer Graphics Designer – for The Gray Circle
- Choreographer/ –
- Music Composer – Jonathan Dove
- Music Director –
- Fight Director – Terry King
- Sound Designer – Paul Groothuis
2004 revival[]
The production was revived, again at the Olivier, National Theatre, in 2004. It opened on 20 November 2004 and ran until 2 April 2005.[2] The production was again directed by Nicholas Hytner with and featured the following cast:
- Serafina Pekkala – Adjoa Andoh
- Billy Costa –
- Lord Boreal – John Carlisle
- Jessie – Michelle Dockery
- Mrs Lonsdale –
- Pantalaimon – Jamie Harding
- Roger Parslow –
- Iofur Raknison/Jeptha Jones –
- John Faa – Ian Gelder
- Lord Asriel – David Harewood
- Golden Monkey –
- Farder Coram –
- Ben – Pascal Langdale
- Lilly –
- Brother Jasper/Kaisa – Elliot Levey
- Will Parry – Michael Legge
- Stelmaria –
- Mrs Coulter – Lesley Manville
- Professor Hopcraft – Iain Mitchell
- Salcilia –
- Daisy –
- Dr Cade – Chiké Okonkwo
- Tony Costa – Harry Peacock
- Lee Scoresby –
- Iorek Byrnison – Alistair Petrie
- Dr West –
- Thorold/Balthamos – Samuel Roukin
- Fra Pavel – Nick Sampson
- Ruta Skadi/Betty –
- Lyra Belacqua – Elaine Symons
The technical crew remained largely the same as the original production with only the following changes/additions:
- Associate Lighting Designer –
- Music Director –
Awards and nominations[]
The production won two Laurence Olivier Awards in 2005 for Best Set Design for Giles Cadle and Best Lighting Design for Paule Constable.[2][3]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "National Theatre : Productions : His Dark Materials Part I 2003/04". Archived from the original on 7 February 2012. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "National Theatre : Productions : His Dark Materials Part I". Archived from the original on 19 December 2007. Retrieved 10 February 2008.
- ^ Laurence Olivier Awards: Past winners | Official London Theatre Guide Archived 12 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine
External links[]
- 2003 plays
- Plays by Nicholas Wright
- Plays based on novels
- His Dark Materials